'Hints Builder Paid Money To Councillor MIMICO (CP)--Mrs. Anne C. sion of the bylaws for the prop-|tini, a former employee of real Burgess, a former real estate erty. estate agent Arthur Jamarino, saleswoman, told Mimico's ju- Mrs, Burgess testified that as|testified that he had never seen |dicial inquiry Monday she was she arrived for the meeting, anyone pay a bribe to building told builder Simon Traub paid|Traub ran from the town hall| inspector Jack Book. Last Fri- $500 to councillor James Ferrie and said: "Get in the car! Get|day he gave hearsay evidence when Ferrie was town clerk inlin the car! That just cost me that part of his commission on 1956. $500." land sales went to Book. She testified that she ap-| She said she asked Traub to Book, 39, was appointed the proached Arthur Lamb, building whom he gave the money and town's first full - time building Top brass of the New Party, whose founding convention is now under way at Ottawa are UAW Wage Street Divides NEW PARTY (left to right) Harold Winch, CCF MP for Vancouver East; inspector at that time, to see| whether Traub could build two five-plexes on property she was handling. She testified Lamb said it he replied to Jimmy Ferrie. "My first reaction was why should Jimmy Ferrie get the|inquiry, said Mrs. Burgess' ev- $500," she added. Mrs. Burgess said she later inspector in 1957. Walter Martin, counsel for the idence was misleading. He waved receipts which he said TOP BRASS the national committee for the New Party; Hazen Argue and Tommy Douglas, leadership Stanley Knowles, chairman of Agreement Free And Slaves | Ends Aug. 31 DETROIT (AP)--The United Auto Workers Union served for- mal notice on General Motors Corporation Monday it will ter- minate its present wage agree- Jen with GM at midnight Aug. 1. The union's termination notice did not indicate whether it might continue working in GM plants after the termination. The UAW was believed to have beaten GM to the punch] | In this first of a series of | four stories intended to il- luminate the problems that make up the Berlin crisis, AP correspondent Carl Hart- man outlines the historical background of the isolated, divided, threatened city. By CARL HARTMAN BERLIN (AP)--Isolated, di- |vided, threatened -- these are the words most often used to describe Berlin. All of them are |accurate. the middle of Soviet-controlled| {East Germany, with the rest of the Western world 110 miles] | away, l The Communists permitted | contact between West Berlin and| West Germany only across two canals, four roads, four rail lines and three air corridors. In June 1948, the Communists| blocked everything but the air| |corridors. For 11 months a| Western airlift supplied West| Berlin's 2,250,000 citizens. | After the blockade ended, | | WIFE could be done when the bylaws met former Mayor W. A. (Gus) [showed that Mr. Traub paid were changed and that the later Edwards and recounted the in- $343 to the town in normal per- said "three men on the building cident to him. She said he told! mit fees. committee have to be satisfied." [her he had never taken a dollar| He said that Aubrey Golden, She said a meeting was ar-|in his life and said he would counsel for the rate payers' ranged and she understood the 'keep my eye on it." group, led evidence "indicating purpose was to discuss a revi-| Under questioning, Lindo La-|that Mr. Traub paid Jimmy - -- oo | Ferrie $500." He said it would lead the judge, the public and the press to believe Mr. Ferrie | got the money. He said Mr. Gol- den was guilty "of the worst kind of irregularity" that a law- yer could commit, "So far as I am concerned, 1 think his (Golden's) conduct is beneath contempt," Mr, Martin | added. 'Jodoin Gives candidates, snd David Lewis, Labor Views chairman of the national coun- cil of the New Party. OTTAWA (CP) -- Claude Jo-|the proposal of H. W. Herridge, When Mr. Gol s % CHAINED doin, president of the Canadian CCF MP for Kootenay West, to|ject, ling sade ose to J Labor Congress, has made a|open all committee reports to|told both lawyers that kind of MAN ARRESTED [strong plea for an anti-neutra-|amendments directly from the|language had no place in the list New Party that would work|floor. inquiry CALGARY (CP)--A Cal- |for peace within existing west- Instead, the convention de- : gary man has been charged |ern alliances. |cided to follow the trade union with forcible confinement In a keynote speech Monday [practice and permit delegates following discovery by police - | 0 the New Party convention, |to refer committee reports back of his wife, chained to a post |the 48 - year - old leader of the|to committees for complete re- in the basement of their [1,150,000 - member central la- drafting in light of the floor de- home. bor body spelled out labor'sibate or for new consideration Frank Wright, 37, was ar- |views on foreign affairs, which of a specific point. rested when police were [Promises to be a knotty policy| The vote resulted in charges called by a neighbor to in- [question facing the New Party |of unfairness against Mr. Grube vestigate. founders. land of incompetence against They said Mrs. Wright, 33, "The idea of a completely|those counting the standing|on collision between two cars on had been bound by the right [neutral position in world affairs|vote. Mr. Grube repeatedly had|a nearby sideroad ankle with a heavy chain at- |as they exist today is a com-|to bank his gavel for order and| Dead are Geoffrey Charles tached to a steel pole. They |plete illusion," said Mr. Jodoin. shout down delegates attempt-|yames and his wife Rita, both| said she had been there for |'"There are no completely neu-ling to use the floor micro-|37 their daughter Faith. 2 of | two days and had only one [tral countries and there can be phones. Streetsville, and Robert "Thorn-| meal. none. The neighbor called police Four Dead In | Two-Car Crash COOKSVILLE (CP) -- Four persons were killed and five children and an adult severely injured Monday night in a head- "The very idea of neutralism|--and not specific amendments| "Five surviving children of the 3 HERMAN THE HERMIT A German Shepherd dog who has lived four months under a tree near Woodstock, | avoiding attempts to entice him away, has created some- thing of a legend in the area. Here Herman the Hermit greets one of his frequent visitors, Marjorie Young, 9. (See story Page 16.) --CP Wirephoto 'Photo Identifies Amnesia Victim CHATHAM (CP)--An amne- peared in the newspaper, it was sia victim who had been in Bos. | regbgnized by a friend and pro- pital since Saturday was iden- : tified Monday as Mrs. Arthur| Thus the convention debate dyke, 14, of Brampton. | Poisson, 24, of Belle River, near ceived 30 telephone calls from Windsor. vincial police at Bejle River, Chatham police Monday re- as far away as Montreal inquir- Just as remarkable is one ywoqarn authorities set about| after the woman attracted is contrary to the philosophy of will bo the chief She was identified through a|ing about the woman. Three a: oh i inaiton. re| isti i a avenue | s Family. Sus ¥ in contract terminaiton. There|characteristic of the city that Pi ua sockpiles of every- James Family, Susan, 15, Hea had been speculation it would|no single word can describe. It ! : come Monday or today from the js the only place on earth where ing 2 ou Needs, fiom Lair company. you can walk across the street DS i Crown Supplies for A Ford Motor Company|from communism into the West- \ "4 jo" hime were accamuls spokesman viewed the UAW's|ern world, and vice versa. ated lias GM termination notice as a de-| This is a legacy from Adolf : 5 velopment "that takes the heat|Hitler and the Nazis whose Swa- MIRACLE TAKES PLACE off us." Unlike the GM contract,|stika banners flew in Berlin] Tt was after the blockade, too, | 'Self Defence' Ford's expires Aug. 31 "unless|from 1933 until the country was that West Germany's "economic e e ence extended by mutual consent." |defeated in 1945. miracle" spread to Berlin and] MONTREAL (CP)--The Que- [the trade union movement. through which the 1,725 offici-|ther, 13, Paul, 11, David, 10, and Photograph published in a Wind- Toronto men and one from Sar- "We have grown in an atmos-|ally - accredited delegates will| peter, 6, were taken to hospital. | SOF, Rewspaper. {nia, a former Chatham resident phere of controversy and welinfluence policies and plans of, Kenneth Thorndyke, driver of| Police refused to say how she|saw her in hospital in the hope could never have made the con-|the New Party, being born from|nhe second car and father of Ro-| came to be in Chatham. of identifying missing relatives tribution which we have, had|a three - way alliance of the pert was in serious condition in| Mr. Poisson arrived here, Mr. Poisson said his wife was we not been prepared to take CCF, organized labor and New| hospital in Toronto, 15 miles| Monday to take his wife to al/depressed when they visited a our stand on one side or the Party clubs representing the|goutheast of here. "The three Windsor hospital. beverage room Friday night. other. professions, 181m ers ethnicl dest James children were in| She had been under observa-|She left the table while they REMAIN IN NATO groups and others. fair condition, while the younger|tion in St. Joseph's Hospital were there and did not return. : Mr. Jodoin said that Canada| ARGUE REBUFFED were in serious condition with since she turned up at the ad-| A hospital spokesman said At Ford negotiations Monday, The Red army occupied the developed the contrast between bec game and fisheries depart-'should remain in NATO a point The convention also rejected multiple head and body injuries. Mmitting desk Saturday, unable to Mrs. Poisson had been in a good Ken Bannon, the UAW's Ford|city in the closing days of theithe East and West sectors. ment said Monday charges|directly at odds with CCF pol-|@ bid by supporters of national] Police used crowbars to extri-|Say Who she was or why she state of mind until Monday ev- chief, called for the company to Second World War, then turned west Berlin is a city of new|against two Brockville men of icy but within the proposed pro- CCF leader Hazen Argue to pull|cate three victims from the Was there. A medical examina- ennig. She started to cry be- put some economic proposals on|over a little more than half the yp ;15in05. Tt has heavily stocked hunting moose out of season and|gram of the New Party. his parliamentary report from|wreckage. Two children were tion disclosed no injury or ill-/fore her husband came. She still the attention of a girl though a basement window. Shot A Moose regional alliances will BENEFITS REFUGEES pear. ; Bu imo] HINTLESHAM, England (CP) oo toon oo ' destrians and private cars. hel have hd to leave behind almost LG era he alin Girl UNVEILS FOREIGN POLICY 3 i Mr. Jodoin unveiled a six- ively wn w 7 o for In Algiers opened the annual . . 3 pd Te A es Jor have had good prospects for festival in this Suffolk village, point summary of labor's for- the bargaining table, saying "jt|city to the Americans, French ,. 4 juxurious shops. Streets are|in a provincial park have been! "We do not regard NATO as|the tag - end of the convention|thrown to the roadway by the ness. does not recognize him. contract negotiations." |gzu allies got the more Populols| fratric problem. ford IIT and Arthur Fell, were the moment, it is a means by In a narrowly - divided stand-|cidents I have ever seen," said|where she went to the hospital. other died three years ago. auto industry June 28. |ing quarters. The Soviet sector| - tion, least of all in what was|Mont Tremblant Park in the|selves to be our friends. vote that could indicate a close ered with blood, said he tried Windsor. When the picture ap-| but there was little left of them. © Linden, the great names among pervisor for the game and fish-|the view that Canada can con- fer J.C. Saskatchewan's prem-| Police were unable to deter- did not last in Berlin. By 1948, | Ad £ and the stock .de-| i | are poorly stocked and the stock|cused entered a plea of self-de mempership, ator than by| IN RPRETING THE After Eviction WASHINGTON (AP) -- The TORONTO (CP)--A provincial| araments. They were soon to } cutting herself off in an isolated | TE NEWS n-|are weary looking. Cars are|i4 py sessions Judge Omer Cote. |: 15 ante asmith, Mon ih eo Teang nected telephone, electric on wheels and in the air -- to : trains continued to run through|lin every day, and at peak pe-| i insult" suffered when he was| Word that he is stepping out tinue a drive against reckless isap- The board originally offered due to get the axe after the Cue last weekend against erratic By DAVID OANCIA tish farmers and the Europes a inthis of IIMALY ; uropean room for extended playground pierre Salinger said in effect a benefit in aid of the Pesto-|€ign policy views -- an imme- i |and British allies ; 1 a : : nd t s: : is high time that Ford made ajand Britisn aiies. _ |filled with well-dressed people dismissed. an article of faith or a way of|and place it in a featured spot|impact. Earlier Mrs. Poisson had been] The couple have two childre serious contribution to current] In dividing the city, the West-| 13 there is the beginning of a| The two men, George T. Ful-|life, but we do believe that, at|at the opening. "It was one of the worst ac-|sent by a priest to a hotel, from aged mgd two years. -- Negotiations opened with the| half, with some of the best liv- East Berlin has much less to|charged in connection with the which we can co - operate with|ing vote, the "fair play for Ar-|one policeman. Another, Sgt.| Mr. Poisson is a laborer with| included the central district of [Show in the way of construc-|shooting of a moose last year in|those who have proven them-|gue' move was rejected -- a|Allan Johnston, his shirt cov-ithe Chrysler Corporation in| . . government buildings and shops, | = 5 0 Ce the city, Laurentians north of Montreal, | 'We look for some major batfle for party leadership be-|to help the screaming children CIA Director Police Prepare SYSTEM FAILS Wilhelmstrasse and Unter den| Firmin Bourque, district su-(change in NATO and we hold Weer the 10, - sear - old COW|urtl help arrived. Wants $300,000 1 ne eto porin. By. 1048, | Berlin streets, are dead. Shops|eries department, said the ac. tribute to bringing these ier (I. C. (Tommy) Douglas, 56. mine the cause of the crash. | anis ' Dulles To Quit For Weekend East and West Berlin had sep-|: ! ty a 5 {changes about by retaining urrencies and city gov-|is sleazy. There are fence and the case was dismis- y i i " rate currenci Bi Pl lB Ro le Bg gg ! TORONTO (CP)--Waller Ka. WHE House atime Monday police spokesman said Monday pave separate -- and uncon- l14 ' ' position outside the organiza- ross, a Toronto tinsmith, Mon-| 'hat Allen W. Dulles is retiring the force will be out in full-- scarce. They testified that the moose at-| 1° es A ; ; : : He said labor looks to the day | Toronto board of education in the United States Central Intel- : - 10/nower and surface transport! Hundreds of refugees have tacked them after they had got ni : he 1d D All | li iy control traffic SgHng Le Civic systems. Subway and elevated been coming over to West Ber- out of their car, he said. Whe the Uitsy Nations will be ou Tro payment for his property and|ligence Agency Holiday weekend and to con- | : : 0 : : epp both parts of the city. There|riods the daily figure has topped . i lg Jus home ahdicame a5 3 quiet anti-climax to drivers. _|was little interference with pe-|the 1,000 mark. Though they Ira e Barriers 2. a welter of reports that he was The OPP Jevncicd » Siw Kaross $13,700 when his prop-|ban fiasco of last April. highway driving. This, said erty was expropriated to make White House Press Secretary I tor Leonard Neil, Canadian Press Staff Writer Free Trade Association. ci - 3 Staff Inspec A Western European eco- |and parking space at a neigh- that it has been Dulles's plan all borning collegiate and publi was just a tuneup for the watch dog effort this weekend when all} available men and cruisers will) be on patrol and a helicopter will watch for traffic jams over munist uprising of 1953. But the Communists isolated West Berlin much more effec-| tively from West Germany, This| since the city lies iniaganda. was easy, The flight of refugees has hit the Communists heavily, in both their economy and their prop-| i Vi , it r diate end to the testing of nu- 2 t zurope Bg Thi ged ox clear weapons, continuous ne. (ROm{C union eliminating trade --~-3gram were a film festival, gotiations toward universal dis-| barr ers among member coun art exhibitions and ballets. armament under a system of 'Iles looms : t pos b nS A > international control and inspec-(Sibility as a result of Britain's RIVAL GROUP The EFTA was formed as a as a distinct pos. Tival for the Common Market smith equipment was put in.the| |by Britain, Austria, Switzer- Clalong to retire by the end of |this year and there has been no |change in that plan. Salinger declined comment on school. Kaross's furniture and tin- | basement of the collegiate when tion, an anti - nuclear weapons|rcquest to join the European lang, Portugal, Norway, Swe-|he was evicted. He said it would|2 report that Fowler Hamilton, 1 | stand for Canada's forces, a Common Market. n .and Denmark. : stay there until he got the|30 a Wall Street lawyer with a %| gradual channeling of defence] Prime Minister Macmillan The Commonwealth is a $300,000. {long background of government expenditures into constructive|braved the angry taunts of Con- great source of stability and|---- TOI ~~ Service, is in line to succeed | peaceful projects, more active|servatives and Opposition La- (strength both to Western Eu-| RALLY DRAWS 15,000 Dulles. {aid for under - developed coun-|bor members alike Monday to rope and to the world as a CIUDAD TRUJILLO (AP) -- Former president Eisenhower tries and a stronger United Na-| announce his. government's de-| Whole, and I am sure that its|The biggest opposition rally appointed Dulles, 68, CIA chief tions, with a UN police force. cision in the House of Com-|Value is fully appreciated by held in the Dominican Republic|in 1953, after he had served two | He also said that organized mons. the member governments of the|in 31 years booed the name of years as deputy director. |labor has a logical right to par-| There were Conservative European Economic Commun-|President Joaquin Balaguer Sa-| After the Cuban invasion dis- ticipate actively in political af-| ries of "shame" and 'resign' ity," (Common Market) Mac-{turday night and cheered aster, the CIA was accused of fairs -- both domestic and in-| the British leader reed Ee | Millan said. charges the government fails to|faulty intelligence work and ternational. a | tatemont that coald hace. thel The ultimate goal of the Com- | guarantee liberty. An estimated|there was talk of a drastic | "As trade unionists we do not | ero tof ing the Bobey of mon Market is the elimination |15,000 persons gathered in In-|shakeup. Spokesmen for the ag- want to dominate, neither do ico aia "isolation" that has|Of trade barriers among mem-|dependence Square.for the rally ency denied the charges and {we want to be dominated. guided Britain's foreign polics ber countries. This envisages| called by the National Civic Un-|President Kennedy set up a spe- He reiterated the CLC's posi- Be Teen y the creation of an economic un-|ion, which terms itself non-po- cial board headed by retired tion on the New Party -- that| Brit te aid | {ion where goods would flow | litical but appears to be the Gen. Maxwell Taylor to inves- it will retain its independence, | ritain, he said, is to make|freely across national frontiers. most politically active of all op- tigate the whole U.S. intelligence the Metropolitan Toronto area, Highway 400 between Toronto and Barrie and over the Nia-| 7 gara Peninsula. y Park Orator Given Remand TORONTO (CP) -- Douglas Campbell, 32, charged with il- legal speechmaking in a park| and with obstructing police, was) remanded Monday to Aug. 15. | Campbell, a University of Tor-| "oa i x . J onto student who drives a taxi 2 i for a living, was arrested Sun- day when he made a ban-the- bomb speech in Allan Gardens.| He was later released on $100 bail. : | Campbell claimed in an inter-| view police beat him up before| he was released because he re-| fused to be photographed and fingerprinted before talking to a| lawyer. Police said they used only the| force permitted by the Criminal] {while urging its member unions(a formal application to join the ita affiliate with the new left- community formed by France, | |wing party. Italy, West Germany, Belgium, | | "I declare most solemnly that The Netherlands and Luxem-| once the New Party is formed, bourg. | |as it will be at this convention, |the Canadian Labor Congress|MOVE FOR PROGRESS { {will not interfere or try to in-| "We have now reached the fluence the internal affairs of stage where we cannot make the New Party; just as we will|further progress without enter- | most strenuously oppose any in-|/ing into formal negotiations," i|terference on the party of the said the British leader. | |New Party in our internal af- "If, as I earnestly hope, our bHruuoa e The new community. would| have one uniform import tariff| position groups. | setup. level applicable to imports into! any part of the area. The Common Market now is purely an economic organiza-| tion. The rules defined in the| Rome Treaty--the community's constitution -- apply strictly to economic affairs, But their long-term implica-| tions have important political over-tones. If the nations of| \TOP QUALITY, > MEAT BUYS at BUEHLER'S Code to put him through the | routine. Ascampbell amen de WEATHER FORECAST fai offer to enter into negotiations| : | This was the course of the|with the European economic! : p {late tonight. Partly cloudy fol-{CLC ever since it decided to|community is ri we shajr|making an economic union| {lowed by a few showers late to-|work with the CCF and other|spare no efforts to reach 2 aot. | Workable, they would be well on night and Wednesday morning. groups to establish a new poli-|isfactory agreement." Sal-/the way to a political union of Lake Ontario: Notheast wind [tical movement of the left | This is an indicalibi. of i states. : 15 knots. Fair today, becoming] "It is perfectly logical for|serigusness with which the gov- cloudy late tonight with scat-|Workers to participate actively ernment is approaching mem- : ; ich NEW BUILDING tered showers Wednesday morn.|in political affairs," he said.|pershin 2 inoii /ICTORIA (CP) -- A four- ial "lt 7s equally logical that & 1a. | Pership and the determination |storey office and stores build- Forecast temperatures bor organization such as the Ca- Western urope succeed in| On Sale Wednesday Only ! LEAN AND TENDER BLADE RIB Ib. 69* CLUB Ib. 59* VEAL PATTIES 31bs.§1 COOKED HAM 1b. 99 EEE Fender EAT'N AT TRUE-TRIM BEEF ( STEAKS! Ib. 49¢ |to succeed. ; A 3 ; {ing will be built here for a dis- nadian Labor Congress, repre- city hall advising the public to} listen to him. il 1 Some Sho W ers Macmillan emphasized th e|trict marine age A i ich Wednes-| : A A > ncy at Low tonight and high Wedne 5|senting as it does many groups|necessity to protect the inter-|$2,500,000. It gen Jato ust ot Niagara River 8 G a ay, 4. | : | \ Lake Ontario, Georgian Bay, |, lof workers, should maintain its| sts of the Commonwealth, Bri-'450 employees. - Takes 2 Lives Toronto, complete independence. NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP) EDT: North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny with Windsor wo Niagara Falls teen - agers ind mel Monday in He lower Niagara Hivet near iy Synopsis: Cool air covers alla few cloudy intervals today St. Thomas . rg in, about two miles be-|of eastern Canada and the Partly cloudy tonight and Wed- London PIS he American falls. northeastern United States, but/nesday. A few scattered show- Kitchener .. Toy {he th was was swim.|bright sunshine should bring ers Wednesday. Little change in| Wingham ........ A third you bi 1d police he higher temperatures during the temperature. Winds light. Hamilton ming with them to daytime but tonight will likely Algoma, White River, Coch-|gi Catharines be on the cool side again. rane: Sunny and a little warmer To W 5 aes Lake Erie, Windsor: today. Increasing cloudiness to-|: °ronto tried to save them but was waved off by one of the drown- : Cloudy | =; hw with a few sunny intervals to- night followed by a few scai-| Peterborough .... | tere 0 ing youths. All The victims were en a showers Wednesday. Trenton Robin-| day and Wednesday. A few scat-| J Smiech, 15, and Joseph tered showers or thunderstorms | 180%: Killaloe .. | Marine forecasts valid until 11 Muskoka were swimming|tere I with Mp0 16, of Niag-|tonight and Wednesday. A Kile! om. Wednesday: ara Falls, who told police he coller today. Winds northeast 15.| Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: North Bay ....... 5 saw only the Robinson boy| Lake Huron, Niagara, Hamil-| Northeast winds 15 knots be Sudbury ....eees. struggling against a strong cur|ton, London: Sunny with cloudy| coming variable 10 fo 15 late Earlton rent. (intervals today. Mainly cloudy|tonight and Wednesday morn Biro said he swam fo help|tonight and Wednesday, A few|ing Fair today becoming cloudy P him but Robinson shouted: [scattered showers Wednesday. with scattered showers tonight. White River ..... : "Don't try to come near me. Littl change in temperature. | Lake Erie: Northeast winds 15| Moosonee ....... : Goodbye." Winds light. knots, becoming light variable!Sault Ste. Marie . 5 Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m. Haliburton, Timagami, "If we are to have free trade {unionism then our labor organ-| |izations must remain free of the| {domination of any group--gov-| {ernment, political parties or employers." He said labor always has had an interest in politics. | "One has only to look at the| objectives of organized labor to realize that political activity of| some form is a must for trade unions." CROWDED AND NOISY For an opening day, the con- vention was crowded and noisy. Only the strict but good-natured chairmanship of George Grube (of Toronton, an old hand at On-| tario CCF rallies, kept it from] i getting out of hand. } I | REGISTRATIONS FOR FALL CLASSES Are Now Being Taken For The SCHOOL FOR RETARDED CHILDREN Applications Must Be In By Aug. 15, 1961 5 NI a3 N1 N3 NN Soo For Further Information Write To: = MRS. W. CAMPBELL 848 FLORELL DRIVE - OSHAWA i {Kapuskasing 4... | A - A a ne AE rp